) THE TAURIC SAVES FOURTEEN MEN FROM THE SINKING RIALTO. SMART LIFEBOAT WORL €iant Swells, Kteltes of enster, Put the Lives Rescued in Peritâ€"Fo the Sea and Tem Can man and the skipper sen arms ne«fly under, ABC U"" M I0.0 00 rescue was abandoned. Then the lifebont came closer alongsideâ€"perhaps within forty feetâ€"and . Chief Officer Kerr shouted, C io McE on wunt to be sxxed ?* Every Line ment. Just th wcuthemst sne doubdtIes® MECU COR0uT0a; _ four hours aftor she Was abandoned. She was adouble decker, was built at Avondale, Nova Scotis, in 1881, was owned in Liverâ€" pool,and hatledfrom Windsor, Novea Scotia. Whe measured 1,462 tons, and was built of Just then smoke was seen far to the scutheast. It was from the twinâ€"screw freighter Tauric of the White Star line, about 420 nailes out from Queenstown. Cupt. Thomas Jones of the Tauric had spied the Rialto thirteen miles on his starboard bew, and had read through his glasses the sppeal futtering from her mizzen, He steamed far out of his course and lay to while Chicf Officer Kerr and seven volunâ€" teers got a lifeboat ready for launching. The ’lg‘suric steamed about a quarter of & mile +c windward of the Riaito, and the lifeboat was swung out on the davits. The Tauric was rolling heavily, and, as the lifeboat was being lowered, it struck the tall freighter‘s steel side several times. Four of the men who were trying to keep the boat clear had their arms hurt between the gunwale and the ship‘s side. The shoulder of cne was dislocated. _ At last the liieboat touched water and cleared the ship. It bounded off, down one declivity and up another, looking to the men on both vessels as if it would be overwhelmed. at any moment. The lifeboat was rowed within fifty feet of the lee side of the Rialto, while Capt. Bain‘s men tried to run a line from the main lee yardarm to the lifeboat, They expected to siide down the line into mmt. But the ship rolled her yardâ€" Cmata a"ucder, and this method of ship Tavric. «Words fail whon we consider mendous seas that were running prom(rt. manner in which Capt. J spon ed to our ni?ndl of distress, PeC ./ 0 sat of his course, and J sponded 10 UHL 7 MURE mp:ny miles out o; his course, and perseverâ€" ing for six hours. Every one of our men Was taken off unburt, aithough nearly all of Capt. Jones‘ men were injured, more Of less, _ ‘The chief officer deserves the highent credit for his skill and bravery through the whole time of zesoue." Capt Euin says the Rialto‘s cargo, when weter soaked, would be like lead, and that sne doubtless went down within tweaty» I ECC TCo oo kandamned:<Bhe yot safe and sound,and was dragged aboard the lifeboat. All reached the boat, with nothing worse than a frigid ducking. The Captain, following & nautical tradition, was the last man to leave his ship. The Tauric landed the fourteen men at New York on Tuesday. Capt. Bain says : __""It was noble in Capt. Jones to go sc far out of his course to save us The Tauric was merely a speck, that we saw only when she was riding the top of a swoll, when she headed for us. The swells were higher than any I had ever seen. W hen my ship was in the trough of a sea and the f{num was in the trough of another I could see only the tops of her funnels. There was not & &D wboard the Rialto who was hurt." Capt. Bain and his men signed and presented the following to Capt. Jones : t«We the undersigned members of the crew of the ship Rialto, wish to express o:;:snbi- tude tor our miraculous . rescue, the kind treatment we have received from Capt. Tones, the officers and crew of the steamâ€" .0 Srecrnr o ing for six hours. Eve: taken off unburt, al Capt. Jones®‘ men we! T as N2 OB AfWseee b Stretched Retween 21000 0tmmati hivndntmntzn iredatg im Lt is men make the line fast to the taftâ€" ‘The other erd was secured at the of the lifeboat. . Then the hardy lifeâ€" ; bent to their cars and the line ned. â€" A sailor caught hold of the line and over hand, made his way to the at. He was buried once by a mighty forestaysail, and MIARON RUDRTT W . er cargo shifted to starboard and for several hours almost on her ds. _A tall comber swashed over board side, crushing twentyâ€"four ns and carrying away two lifeboats. gaile died away to m brisk wind, x gigantic southeasterly swell, and , richted. All hands had been parative! y from ly, and some of them wanted to e other boat and take their chances inut awells. Capt. Bain said he ick by the ship up to the last mo. TTERLN hove to under lower main mil. and mizzen storm try art rty rried a crew of twenty» miled through placid seas until the middle of Sepâ€" took a heavy gale from ke her rudder post. She araiso, where she remainâ€" ( fine o mctes .T her wfe i "muslin‘ drawing, ils, the Nova Scotian ered south from the »tra, off the Peruvian p laden with guano orp. She was comâ€" «enh Bain, a bardy of a Fierce South yes of Mescuers and Four Jumped Into Came Down a Taut ween Ship and Lifeâ€" AND SHIVERIN we consider the treâ€" were running and the which Capt. Jones reâ€" is of distress, coming ph hold to clip a without 1d nto & Fast Runs and slow Kuns and TCDMCOO ties of Various Locomotives. It takes about an hour to get #teAm enough on an ordinary locomotive . eng!1¢ to start it, from cold water, It is a familiar fact that the water in the boilers of steam fire engines in cities is kept hot while the engine is standing in the house by a pip® connection with a boiler in the cellar underâ€" neath; when the ongine starts it‘s own fire is lighted. . Locomotive engines that are running regularly stand in the roundhouse in the intervals between runs with their fires banked. . The fires are kept cleaned, but they may not be hauled for woeeks. The practice varies somewhat in . this reâ€" spect. â€" On some roads fires are hauled once « week, on other roads they are kept up in engines for three or four weeks or more. continuously. ‘ A locomotive engineer on one of the tastâ€" est runs out of a large city, says that he has never scen an engine that would run 2s fust as he would like to ride. No appr® hension apparently is felt by the engineet | of a fast engine. Calmness is one of his | most noticeable traite; and if he worries &t all, it is because he has got a hot box, Of |something has happened so that he may | not be able to make the time, und not beâ€" | cause he is going through the airat fifty, |aixty, seventy iles an hour. But it shou‘d s , be understood thatnone but a man of perfect | vaâ€"va i« likely to reach the footboard of a LOCOMOTIVES AND ENGINEERS mo/ omm RmnsRne ies OO Anamesiies s o in l he goes to the round house before train time and looks over the engine‘ and sees that it is in condition and properly supâ€" plied for the run, and in every way ready, and he runs the engine to the station. All this takes time. Sn his return he runs the engine back to the round bouse; this takes time, too, though not so much as the time spent before the rum; but together these periods add materially to the length of the eogineer‘s hours. Taking the duties into account, the greatadvantages o a fast run are manifest ; the shorter the time snent on ths road, the shorter the EME SDERE OD. We CS C imL T.0 can cortenret timis total time. There is a common impression that no two locomotive engines work just alike,even though made from the same patterns. A locomotive engineer of lorg expcrience says that the inpression is correct. He says, by way of illustration, that two highâ€"grade watches of the same pattern, and supposed to be just alike, may not work the same way. â€" One may not vary balf a minute in in six months and so be, pnct.i_ally, & perfect timekeeper, while the other may vary a minute in a montb. It is so with engines ; they do not work ju«t aitke,. One may steam aud run better than the other. The slightest variation in fiuish or udjastâ€" ment might besufficient to cause this. When the new engine has been run a year Ot so it goes to the shop to be overhaulnd. With it goes a report of the engineer who has run it on the engine‘s characteristics and performance. â€" If the engine has developed any defects they can usuaily be remedied «t this overhauling, and it may be that the engine comes out on the rowd again as smart as any of them. A Telephonie Device to Find Wulks at the Kotfom of the Occan. Capt. MacEvoy, a French naval officer, has succeeded in applying the telephonic principle to a submarine "revelator," which s intended to detect the hulks of sunken vessels in the depths of the ccean. The magnetic action exercised by great quantiâ€" instruments furnishes the The afficacy of the little instrument has ! been tested, as by its indication the hulk } of the Russian ironclad Roussalka, which | had foundered in a storm in the Finnish | Sea, was successfully located in more than thirtyâ€"six fathoms of water. So exnczlyl could the officers determine the berth of | the sunken vessel that the divers lmded‘ under the bow of the hulk at the ï¬m‘l under : descent The apparatus consists of a Hughes induction balance. Two spirals of equal size and shape are connected with induction currents of equal strength. . A third spiral placed in the exact centre between the two and connected with & telephons, will reâ€" main neuter, and no sound can be heard at the telephone. If the central spiral is shiited to the right or leftâ€"that is nearer to one of the spirals than to the otherâ€"a distinct sound can be heard in the teleâ€" phone. If the centre spiral remains in its place, but a piece of iron is brought near to one of the lateral spirals, the induction current in the spiral nearest the iron 18 increased in strength and the telephone sounds the alarm, announcing that the equilibrizm has been upset in some manner. The inductive balance may be lowered to any depth. A wellâ€"insulated cable connects it with the very sensitive telephone situated in the puvigation room. The cable ought to be long enough to allow deepâ€"sca researches in 2,000 or more fathoms depth a We in ME ty m OR B B0 iwg i researches in 2,000 or more fathoms depth The apparatus may aiso be successfully used to find or locate lost anchors, chains or other metal objects, even cables. It can be applied to the announcing of the apâ€" proach of other steamers at & distance. Const defense and naval defense can make much of the revelator in the future. MR UR NZLIAZ eabunds 4e m mt not altogether free, ‘Their liberty was restrained in some respects. For instance, n câ€"rtain cantons no man, Woman or child was to remain unvaccinated. On the conâ€" trary, the law made _vaccination early in life compulsory, and even such as desired it could not have the disease it prevents. Naturally the people were restive under this restraint, and chafed against it as a tiger in a cage chafes againat the bars. ‘They felt that they were deprived of some dazzling possibilities, for in a country where fortunes are few and the people many, rich unsles may live forever if too many dangerâ€" ous diseases are made impossible. In some cantons they were free in this respect. But in the canton of Berne vaccination . was compulsory. Ata general election in that canton they have just changed the law,and thus the area of freedom is enlarged, and the Bernese are as free to have one disease more. _ This is against the efforts of science to save life. The Switzers Love Freedom. The people of Switzerland are famous for their passion for liberty. And this glorious passion has been conspicuously displayed once more in an electoral conflict. â€" For, though free_theo{e?icdlkflj:o- Sziht‘z:'r‘n were LOCATING SUNKEN WARECKS h metal upon finely mrue igeres. Runs and Pecullar! | PRACTICAL FARMING. Drivers are: sometimes annoyed by the plunging and splashing the horses make with their noses when driven to the water« ing trough, wetting the reins and splashing water over everything in their reach, How this may be prevented is shown in the ac" companying illustration, Make a float of any ordinary board, of just the size and shape to cover the surface ;;'yrt‘z‘n"';mve horses to water just sufficient size for the hore through. Through these they the trough. . Into this acull h Aikis neadiwi e on aime unts onieen e e i just sufficient size for the horses to drink thronigh. Through these they will drink, and if the reins are loose, or a halter strap is hanging down, they will not become wet» ted in the ieast. . The water is kept cleaner by the shield, much of the dust and dirt which would otherwise be dropped in the water being caught There can not be a rotation in the pasâ€" tures in precisely the same sense At there is rotation in other crops, for m rotation in grasses differing in character from . that which preceded it can not be laid down without one or more intervening crops Are grown. â€" But there may be, and ought to be, a determinate place in every wellâ€" ordered rotation in which the pastures shall appear, and if possible with unfailing regularity. Where root crops or corn crops are grown, or indeed any kind of the cultivated crop, the aim should be in all instances to soW the grain crop which follows with grass seeds, of course including clevers, where these will grow. . The following year the grass may be cut for hay or pastured, as desired. â€" The more common plan is to cut for hay one or two yeats and to pasture the third year. In sections with plenty of rainfall, cwo cuttings of hay are sought, followed by one season of pasture, But in the dry sections of the West, it would sometimes be better policy perhaps to pasâ€" / ture for a longer time, and more especially when the dryness of the weather had led. to failure to secure a catch of grass for one or more seasons,. Where the land was ‘divided into fields, not fewer than three or fout in number, there would then be a regular succession of pastures in the differâ€" ent fields. When a catch of grass may be looked for | with copsiderable certainty it may be good | policy to shorten the rotation, that is to ‘ say, to cut hay but one season and the pasâ€" | ture but one, or there may be good reasons | for reversing the order of pasturing . by | making it to come before the season when ithe crop is made into hay. â€" Short rotations | are usually preferable to long ones, as they | bring more vegetable matter to the soil ‘ through the frequency with which the grass ‘crops are introduced. | Agriculture has not yet become so far ut Lands preâ€"eminently adapted to pastures, not only because of suitable soil conditions, but because of convenience and good water privileges, may be renewed in at least two ways. They may be enriched through the application of fertilizers in various forms, or they myy be ploughed up, cropped for two or more seasons in order to utilize to good advantage the decaying vegetable matter, and then again laid down to pasture. When thus again resecded, a variety of grasses should be used, the more shortlived of which will soon disappear, but yet they may render good service while they live. This is one form of rotation, or, if the term is preferred, one form of succession. x 1 Bd o‘ Ned OHe EVITM MNARRCCCCICCC Again, pastures may be so arranged that f there may be a sort of succession of them ‘ upon the farm the same season, Rye may come first in order, then orchard grass, where it will grow, and following in close succession, blue grass, After the blue grass, common clover, and next in order mammoth clover and timothy, or alsike clover and timothy. When these are eaten the comâ€" mon clover should be up again, and then the orchard grass. _ In localities where lucerne will g.ow it would mingle nicely with the common red clover, and if rye were sown in August for certain kinds of stock it would again furnish pasture in the fall. In this way a rotation, or more propâ€" erly a succession, of pastures could be made to lollow one another through the entire season, _ And this succession could probaâ€" bly be obtained by using half the grasses named, if the season when each is at its best were carefully considered when the choice is made of the kinds to be sown. RORATORN o Muceuerragen Agriculture has not yet become so far dvanced as to call for an alternation or a accession in the various kinds of grasses hat shall be grown upon the same lands, vhen the regular time in the rotation omes for sowing them. Whether that ime wil: ever come is problematical, . The amber o‘ varieties that are really well dapted to furnish pasture in the section amed is not large, hence every time & iece of land is sown with grasses, to & reat extent, at least, the same varieties ave to be resorted to, But doubtless ome varieties will be added to those which ve have that will enable us to have wider oom for & more extended choice of vari« BV n o ifwertnentia Right methods of feeding are always essential for proper development of . all :lomestic animals. No one knows all about the subject, and all need to seek new light, and to take account of probable mistakes With the approach of spring, while the chill of winter is always in the air,feed the stock well. In most cases increase the amount of grain, especially for working horses and cows in milk, as well as the weanling colts and caives. Physicians say that usually a man‘s overâ€" coat is needed more in early spring than jo midâ€"winter. The grain food is the warmâ€" ing element for the live stock, and it is surely more urgently demanded in March ent azrr. of food that makes life to manâ€" kind seem unendurable. Many of the ills of our households are begun or are aggravated by the meat consumed, which lacks in the genuine quality. Right methods of feeding are always essential for proper development of all in their methods. in the porth, than earlier. As the time for grazing approaches it is important that the cattle and horses be in the most thrifty condition possible. Improvement in growth and fiesh at the opening of the grazing montbs insures usually an unintert upted wdvance for the entiresummer and autemn. Occasionally in the midst of summer the pest of flies makee cruel ravages upon the domestic animals. If gain has not been made in aniioal flesh and tissue prior to this trouble, the whole year usually fails of any resuits, _ Worse than a standstill conâ€" dition follows in such instances, A chronic physical disposition to adverse things is too ofteu the end of all the misâ€" management of all the feeding . In the commercial and manufacturing industries effort is made to show gain every dayâ€"especially every month, and great consternation follows & whole year with no gains. â€" It is still more necessary that the stockman engender a progressive condition of vigorous growth in his stock, as the conâ€" firmed tendency to decline affects not only the stinted animals, but their .offspring often through several generations. There is no such thing as maintaining for a year without loss, any young animal in an average condition of growth,. Vigor is demanded in building up animal frameâ€" work. The horse will usually be sluggish if thus reared. â€" The meat producers, ï¬xl'own slowly, furnish our tables with the indifferâ€" En esn e on cetien on magice t on NA In the commercial i industries effort is made dayâ€"especially every consternation follows & gains. â€" It is still more stockman engender a p Jackâ€"Going to the fancy ball ? Georgeâ€"Can‘t afford a costume. Got a threadbare coat ? Of course. And an old pair of baggy trousors ? Certainly. Well, put them on, and go as a mi Keeping the Reins Dry DEVICE FOR PROTECTING REINS Rotation in Pastures Wall Street Character. Feed Well in Spring. 1;;17 the board cut as many holes , water at once, of J | of the water in a millionâ€" N A Stories of Immense Wealth in the Westâ€" ern â€" Australian â€" Fieldsâ€"Death Has Overtaken Many Prospectors. A despatch from Vancouver, B. C., says: â€"By mail via steamer Miowers comes an astédnishing story from the distant gold fi«lds of Western Australia, hardly credible if it had not been borne out by the arrest of the ringleaders in a terrible. tragedy. Reports of fabulous finds have lately come from Ninetyâ€"Mile Point, where nug: gets of between 50 and 150 ounces of pure gold have been picked up on the surface of the ground. . These stories made men mad with lust for gain, and prospectors in the race for wealth pushed on for hundreds of miles in the wilderness, far beyond where white men hadever been, They had a arcely enough food to keep them alive, They were brought back raging with fever, and placed in the Coolgaraie hospital, already overcrowded | with dying miners. The fate â€" of these desperate . men did not detetr eight new arrivals from forming a syndicate, and with heavy packe of proâ€" visions, water, and rifles, they started from Ninetyâ€"Mile Point, the extreme limit of Coolgardie, to Prupect in the interior. â€" n M Nig NAE CE hack atmue informed the police that after discoverins, w mountain of gold, the party returned to. catap and found that a band ‘of blacks had stolen all their provisions. | The syndicate pursued the blacks to their villages, and butchered the entire encampment, The other murderers have been arrested. The solid hill of quartz which the syndicate found is 70 feet high, 250 feet wide at the base, and 15 at the summit. It is said to be full of gold. The rush is setting in to the scene of the find. The Discase SQIHL Razing in Londonâ€" Many FProminent Fersons Prostrated A despatch from â€" London maysâ€"The weather and the epidemic of influenya have been moderating recently, although thousâ€" ands of houses are still without water as a result of frozen pipes, and many thousands of people are suffering from the popular E. w MR T UELefnance! MTSE C TETTY O edscemnnne ce ig ma{;iy. The present epidemic of infiuenza has been more severely felt in London than in any other part of England, and the death rate has risenâ€" during the past week from 21 per 1,000, the mormal rate, to 38.5 per thousand, a remarkably high record. Lord Rosebery, it now sppears, has been more seriously ill than was generally imâ€" agined, and, it is added, he is improving very slowly, Among the other distinguished sufferers is Baroness Burdettâ€"Coutts, who is suffering from the provailing epidemic. The Home Secretary, Mr. Henry Asquith, has recovered from his avtack of influenza ; Mr. Henry Fowler, the Secretary of State for Indian affeirs, is confined to his room by the "grippe." The Marchioness of Salisbury, who has been suffering from inâ€" fluenza, is now able to leave her bed, and the Duchess of Sutheriand is down with an ‘ attack of the same discase. TTZ® COT Mes e cooconun NTE ReT LCC C oo nginptre The Queen‘s Drawingâ€"room at Buckingâ€" ham palace on Wednesday felt the effect of the influenza epidemic, for the ueual. attendance was considerably reduced in numbers, owing to the fact that so many membersof the aristocracy are now suffering from or else on the road to recovery after an attack of the distressing discase. The military academy at Woolwich has been closed because of the influenza. Lord Rosebery‘s physician said to a friend in Parliament on Saturday that, in all his experience with influenza, he never before had m case of a young, strong man whose recuperative power was so deficient Greenâ€"‘* l m dreagidny DUGCmiQN, Te insomnia. I simply can‘t go to sleep at night." Brownâ€"* Why don‘t you make up your mind that you have to catch a midnight train and resoive to stay awake ? Mr. J. Baker of Stayner, attends to the duties of road commissioner, fire engineer, chief coustable, caretaker of cemetery, truâ€" ant officer and poundâ€"keeper in that town for 1895 at a salary of $400, The Rev. Mr. Silcox, of the Emmanuel Congregational church, Montreal, one of the %en known preachers in that city, has resigned his pastorate because he hel1 some views in advance of his congregaâ€" tion. Mr. James Gibson,one of the oldest resi dents of Stratford, is dead, _ Twenty year~ ago he was a prosperous citizen, and was for years a conductor on the G. T. R. Latâ€" terly he was employed as porter ut the Victoria House. ‘The total fire losses for Canada for 1894 reached $5, 233,200, and the insurance losses $3,358,550, as against $6,232,530 and $3,â€" 955,730 in1893. For 1892 the total loss was $5,269,000, and the insurance loss was $3,305,250. ate J. Hurd, who is doing time at the Kingsâ€" ton penitentiary for robbing a man named Pollock, of Linwood, is one of the best electricians in America, During the World‘s Fair he superintended the working of the electrical machinery there. The landlady objects to smoking, doesn‘t she * asked the new boarder of one of the older inmates. Yes. â€" Did she tell you so * No: but I noticed that nothing ever comes to the table smoking hot SAILORS FIGHTING FIRE. You are the only girl I‘ve kissed, Quoth she, Of that I‘m sure, Because your mode of kissing seems So very amatoor. the British Prime Minister‘s is A woman may put on the trouser, And shun each kitchen utensil ; But its doabtful if yon can aroure her, And teach her to sharpen a pencil. RIVALRY AMONG THE MEN N INFLUENZA EPIDEMIC THIRST FOR GOLD Too Sharp for That He Saw for Himselt. ©I‘m dreadfully troubled with Convinced n;@ RINGS IN ROYAL NOSES, WHERE AFRICAN MONARCHS WEAR THEIR DECORATIONS. tuling over an immense tract of territory east of the Cameroons, and who has received from the â€" German â€" Emporor the â€"Prussisn Order of _ the Crown, uses his Prime Minister and Secretary Lt ind of State as Chief Spittoon Bearer. Gerâ€" man colonial officials are now accustomed to these queer forms of African courtesy, though at first they did not quite know how to accept them. â€" Thus the present Governor of the Cameroons, relating in an official disâ€" patch his first meeting with the Abomel of Alzpim, writes as follows : a 1~ T & N7R on U WIIERE AFRICAN KINGS W EAR THEIR DECORA TIONS, Lubde mt e ind n ind es The cheif grasped my hand and, turning up the palm, epat into it ; then looking into my face he did the rame, Staggered at the man‘s audacity, my first impulse was to knock him down, but his features exâ€" pressed kinduess only, So I returned the compliment with intercat, | His delight was excessive, and he told his companion that 1 must be a great chief," These newly decorated kings and chicfs entertain likewise strange and eccentric notions with regard to the disposal of their dead. â€" Only slaves are buried out of doors. THE HONORED DEA» are interred under the floor of the house, where they must make | things pleasant for the living. â€" The corpse is first hung up by the neck to the roof of the hut, where it ly to allow the bon head to drop off. _ oxâ€"hide, and finally the floor. In the Slave Coast of West Africa, among the Yorubas, the happiness of the dead is believed to depend upon a properly perâ€" formed funeral ; the latter is therefore always conducted with great pomp and ceremony. Should the relatives of the dead be unable to procure sufficient money for the elaborate rites by auy other means, the children are sold for this purpose. .A death will sometimes be concealed for many days, while the family are scraping up the money for the funeral. Y . : ons e make a little diversion in the proceedings. The old and infirm are not looked upon with much veneration by some of the Ajrican races. Among the Mpengwe of the West Coast nobody is allowed to exist who is not hale and hearty, or who cannot make himselt useful. _ Not only are weakly infants or diseased and disabled adulits disâ€" posed of, but old(feopla who can no longer gather sticks, or draw water, or who deâ€" velop a tendency for telling long stories are put to death, NOWt Roomal ynee y Caan o The custom of burying the living with the dead is still continued in these parts of Africa, The wife of a dead man is usually the victim, several unfortunate creatures being put to death at the same time to make a little diversion in the proceedings. The old and infirm are not looked upon with much veneration by some of the Ajrican races. Among the Mpengwe of South America has the greatest unbroken extent of level surface of any country ir the world. â€" The Lianos of the Orinoco are so flat that the motion of the rivers can scarcely be detected over an area of 200,â€" 000 square miles, Sn nrenp in it . rantiion c la Nicrteweratioured ‘Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. . to stay cured also regulate the bowels. V&RY MICE To TAKE Cure SICK MEADACHE and Nevralgia in 20 mimures, also Coated Tongue, Dizziâ€" ness, Biliousness, l_su_l_n in the §ide. Comng:n‘ion. eR s Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive lgec'ml noticoin the Ncientific American, and thus are brought widely before the public with» out cost to the inventor. This splendid ‘pnpcr. jasued weekly, clecantly illustrated. has bi ar the largest circulation of an{ scientific work in the world. $3 a {ur. Sample e;?ma sent free. Buudlng tion, monthly, £.50 a year, Single coples, 25 cents ‘tvery number contains beau~ tiful plates, in colors, and ghowgnvhl of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latest designs and secure contracts, | Address . KENBALL‘S SPAVIH SURE. Pn:ol}'{'o:nn ar Drua Srorks, an Oeeutt Spnytn kecp a bottle on b KENDALL‘S SPAYIX CURE, Where the Rivers do Not Flow Dr, B. J. Kespart Co. Dear Sirsâ€"1 have used sovernl t "Kendall‘s Spavin Care" with m think it tho *ost Liniment I ever i moved one Curb, enc Blood mpa tieo Bene Spavin«. . Have recon weveral of my friends who are muc and keep it. Respecifulty, Book MOSYT SUCCESSFUL REMEDY FOR MAN OR BEAS»T». MUNN & CO., NEW Youk, 361 Broapwax Box 52, Car dall‘s Spm A BLACK KIN the in hand all the tim Yours truly, \ corated kings and chicfs e strange and eccentric d to the disposal of their # are buried out of doors. 1 proofs Caxtox, M Nes tave s mas. PoWELL r blisters are that hnd ured her. 1 XpE 3, 2 i ho H Sash and Door Factory. ED1TORS, CLERGYMEN, PHYSICIANS Lumber, Shingles and Lath always Isâ€"still in his old stand on Tambton Street, near the Post Office, where he is ready to £i11 all orders for HARNESS SHOP! A complete stock of Whips. Combs, brushes, DITB, OW Kkept on hand. ® Repairing vromptly attended to. Firstâ€"Class Workmanship guaranteed. Highest Price paid for Raw Furs PDurham, Jan. 26th, 1892 En m in Seeien n is ae e zy I \\vhich acts on the Bowels, Liver and Stomach, forming a never failing pert fect treatment for all Head and Stoma&:a complaints. They do not, as most i and so many other medicines do,?oq their effect o7 produce after constipation :ï¬dm.ni'eotocake. 25 cents a box, af Stark‘s Powders, each package of which contains two preparations, on im a round woodenâ€"box, the cover 01 which forms a measure for one dose, an mmediate relief for Sick Headache and Stomach, also Neuralgia, and all kinds of nervous pains, and another in capsule (from 4 to 4 of one in an ordinary dosei PONA n 9 onl alagmgke inbinaint in s Pramntery, Men and Women in all Walks of Life Tell of the Remarkable Cares Wrought by South American Nervine Tonic. Mre. Oldstyleâ€"Is Mrs. Newage at home? Servantâ€"Mrs. Newage is an emancipated woman, ma‘am. â€" She is never at home, Newspaper editors are almost as sceptical as the average physician on the subject of new remedies for sick people. â€" Nothing short of a series of most remarkable and well suthentiâ€" cated cures will incline either an editor or a doctor to seriously consider the merits bonestly claimed for a medicine. Hundreds of testimonials of wonâ€" derful recoveries wrought with the (Great South American Nervine Tonic were received from men and women all over the country betore physicians began to prescribe this great remedy in chronic cases of dyspepsia, inâ€" digestion, nervous prostration, sick headache, and as a tonic for buildâ€" ing up systems sapped of vitality through protracted spells of sickâ€" During his experience of nearly a quarter of a century as a newspaper publisher in Paris, Ont., Editor Oolâ€" well, of The Paris Review, has pubâ€" lished hundreds of columns of paid medicine advertisements, and, no doubt, printed many & gracefullyâ€" worded puff for his patrons as & matter of business, but in only a single instance, and that one warrantâ€" ed by his own personnl experience, has he given a testimonial over his own signature. _ No other remedy ever offered the public bas proved such a marvellous revelation to the most sceptical as the South American Nervine Tonic. It has never failed in its purpose, and it has cured when SIX DOSES WILL CONVINCE THE MOST INCREDULCUS., CHAS. LEAVENS, Jr., ‘ HEAVY AND :LIGHT it HARNESS, | SADDLES, 1i BRIDLES, | COLLARS, Etc. New Stock Horse Blankets. P Where She Isn‘t. EDITOR COLWELL * Jn CS CX K In Sstock. N., G & J. McKECHNIE. up&ulo megn: ‘:‘,,.:::j _inglish Spavi ng per(| dard, | Soft or toma{fa Blemishes from st pi Curbs, SPKW- zp"ioq Siden, Opaine ipation, etc. Ba box, af h&.& Warrs OF PARIS, ONT., REVIEW Aard, Soft or Calloused Iamsp- and Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavins, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Mingâ€"Bone, Stifles, Sprains, all Swollen Throats, }Cozhl. etc. Bave $50 by use of oho Warranted by MoFarlane & A Boox To HorsENXEN English Spavin Liniment c0 a curb from my horse. 1 recommending the remedy mysterious promptcess & horses of hard, sofi er blood spayin, splints, ou: D# and sprains Grzorar Ros Combs, Brushes, Bits, eto doctors and tried in vain "I was prostrated with & particuâ€" larly severe attack of ‘Le Grippe,‘" says Mr. Colwell, * and could find nc relief from the intense pains and dis tress of the malady. f‘s.ufl'ered da> and night. â€" The doctors did not hel; me, and I tried a number of medi cines, but without relief. About this time I was advised to try the Soutl: American Nervine Tonic. Its effects were instantancous. â€" The first dose 1 took relieved me. Iimprovedrapidly and grew stronger every day. Your Nervine Tonic cured me in & single The South American Nervine Tonic rebuilds the life forces by its direct action on the nerves and the nerve centres, and it is this notable feature which distinguishes it from every other remedy in existence. The most eminent medical authorities now concedethat fully twoâ€"thirds of all the physical ailments of humanity arise from exhaustion of the nerve forces. The South American Nervine Tonic acting direct upon the nerve centres and nerve tissues instantancously supplies them with the true nourishâ€" ment required, and that is why its invigorating effects upon the whole system are always felt immediately. For all nervous diseases, for general debility arising from enfeebled vitalâ€" wee :{y:m'z:i for stomach troubles of every variety no other remedy can possibly take its place. CHARLES LEAVENS, J!‘h‘!‘ .sp‘fln,. I-‘-l F_lmgn‘ '_nm d} To HoxsEx®X.â€"One bottle 04 vin Liniment completely removed : my horse. 1 take pleasure in ng the remedy, asit acts with promptcess &r the removal from hard, cofé «r salloused lamps, n, splints, ou:bs, sweedy, stifles Grorar Ross, Farmer, Mark: Bold by .\_IcFu_'!-O 4 Co. other medicines were We call the special attention of Pos masters and subscribersto the following sY nopsis of tho pewcpaperlaws : 1. If any person orders his peper discop tinued, he must pay all arreages, Of the publisher may continue to send it antil payâ€" % Svrmmpomliint roma ce mrmemal | Uinbdaaitsacelionter Arintrbuse ~rBrLrpen i PL y mentis .nade, and collect the whole arxoval whether it be taken from the oflice or not. There can be no lega) discontinuance until paymentismade. 2. Aay person who takes a paper from the post oflice, whether directed to hit name or another, or whether be has subâ€" scribed or not is re«sponsible for the pay. 3. If asubscriber orders hi paper to be stopped at a certaintime, and tle published continues to send, the subscriberis bound to pay for it if he takes it cutesf the post office. This proceeds upon ke ground bat a msa must pay for what he uses. PDURRAM DIRECTORY Sabbath Services at Sunday School au 1 Pi Church Wardens, W. Whitmore. Service every 7 p. wm. Sabbatl at 2:30 p. im. 1 day evening at 8 Sunday Serviced, . Saubbath School and p. 11. Preaching at 7 ing Serviceâ€"Thursd: prayer meetiog at 8 p. J. C. POMEROY, Pastom, Service every Sabbath at 10:30 a. m. and 7 p. m. â€" Sabbath School at 2:30 p. m. Prayor meeting every Wednesday evening at 8 p. m. REV. R. MALONEY, Pastor. Darkam Servicesâ€"11 a. m. first Sonâ€" day of every month. Glenelc Servicesâ€" 9m. m. first Sunday of every mopth, 10:30 a. m. third Sun Jay of every month. Rave Your Amonia Senp Wrappers And when you have 25 Ammonia or 10 Puritan Soap Wrappers send them to ns, and a three cent sumEElor postage, and we will mail you FREE.s handsome picture snitable for framing. A list of pictures eround each bar. Ammonia Soap bas no equai. We recommend 16. Write your name plainly and address : W. A. Brapsgaw & Co., 48 and 50 LombardSt., Teronto. Gald4 by all geperal merchants amd; Retter is Six Hovurs. â€"Distressing Kidney, and Bladder diseases relief in six hours the *Great Scuth American Kidney Cure" This‘ new remedy is nï¬gmt surprise and delight on on accouut ofits exceedi romptness in‘ nl‘iluing pain in ?‘.‘:ï¬ï¬fï¬â€™m back, ; and every e urinary passages in male er fog.:?e. It relieves retention of} MECHANICS‘ INSTITUTE. New Hallâ€"open eyery Tuesday evening from 7 to 9 o‘clock, and every Saturday from 2 to4 p. m. Aunual fee $1. Dr. Gun Pres. C. Ramage Sec. Mrs. MacRae, water amd pain in passing it nlmost immeâ€" gotely. Qz l;:: mtgï¬;knlid and eure‘ fhis is your remedy, by McFarlane & b- i-nl;cvle-rtl_icéx;&;n Joln A. Munro, Dcpuz,\'-l_‘wgiauu. Oflice hours from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m Co., Druagists. SONS OF SCOTLAND, BEX NEVIS CAMP NO. 45, meets in S. of S. Hall, Friday on or before full moon. George Binnie, Chicf, Geo. Russel, Sec. SAUGEEN TENT, K.O.T.M., No. 154, meets on the first and third Tuesdays of every month. _ Thos. Brown, Com. F C. Hamilton, R. E. J a. m., to 7 p.m Postmaster. DUBBAM LODGE NXO. 306 OF A.F. & A. M. Night of Meeting, Teesday on or before full moon of each morth. Visiting brethern welcome. Thos. Brown, W. M. Geo. Russell, Sec. G_REY LODGE NO. 169 1.0.0.F. Night of Meeting every Monday evening at 8 o‘clock, in the Odd Fellows Eall, YVisitâ€" ing bretbern welcomed. W. B. Voliet Sec. Gaelphâ€"First Wedesday in eac!: month Haiiistouâ€"Friday Lefore the Guelph Fair Draytonâ€"Suturday betore Guelph. Eloruâ€"The day before Guelph. Douzlasâ€"Monday Lefore Elors Fair. Aowiltonâ€"Crystrl Palace Grounds, th day aifter Guelpb. Listowelâ€" Hirst Friday in each month: PFergusâ€"Thursday following Mouut Fores Mrrkdaleâ€"Saterday before Orapgeville Orangevilleâ€"Recond Thursday in esc month. SW Durhamâ€"Third Tuceday in each wonth ‘r‘ sevilleâ€"Monday _ before _ Durkam Hanoverâ€"Monday before Dorkam. Mount Forestâ€"Third Wednceday in caob month. Shel DUHHAM L.O. L. NO. 632. Night of Meeting, on ThursCay or before full moon in each month. â€" Wim. A Anderson, pion on For Over Filty Years. Mrs. Wixsrow‘s SoormxG SyzUrhas been sued by millions of mothers for their children while teething. If disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and erying with pain of Cutting Teeth sen£ at once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow‘s Soott‘.g Syrup" for Children Teething. it wiil relieve the poor little sufferer immedia tely. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no. mistake about it. It cures Diarrhoea, reâ€" gulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gums and reduces Inflamâ€" mation, and gives tons and energy to the whole system. ‘‘Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing: Syrup" for children teething it pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the best female physicians and nurses in the United zdm‘l 7 P;ll';:eltwentyuti\'e cents a. bottle. Soll by druggists throughout. the world. Be sure and ask for "‘Mrs Wixsiow‘s Seoreaunc Syerp" RINITY CBURCH Old Henâ€"No more domestic drudgery for me ! 1‘d have you know that I‘m an emancipated hen, I am. Old goo-:erâ€"“ You still lay eggs. Qid Henâ€"Yes ; but they are hatched in an incubstor, Jimsonâ€"Doctor, I am getting too stout for comfort, and I want your advice, _ _ Doctorâ€"Nothing reduces flesh like worry. Spend two hours a day thinking of the unpaid bili you owe me. APTIST CHU REV. W. M:GREGOR E1HODIST CRURCH OST OFFICE, Office C.CHURCL REV. A Newspaper Laws. SP G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thomas rtonâ€"â€"Monday before Orangevil lâ€"â€"Tnesday before Orapge\ ilicle irneâ€"Wednesday betore Oravzevillq rtonâ€" Last} Wedvesdry in each W. J. CONNOR, Pastor M The Doctor Prescribes Give it a trial * Up With the Times. Monthly Fairs 3 J A NSH CHURCH 11 ce hours from 8 Arch. MacKenme, Vollet an ble cluss at 2:30 im, â€" Week evenâ€" evening, reguler . Young Peoples Pastor. 11 a. m. and 4 Bible class « on Wednes und / p. M £t 9:30 a.m 11 4 T. M.